Lodi News-Sentinel

Fully vaccinated people can stop wearing masks in most places, CDC says

- Hayley Smith and Rong-Gong Lin II

Federal officials on Thursday announced a sweeping relaxation of face mask guidelines, including allowing fully vaccinated people to safely stop wearing masks in most places.

"Anyone who is fully vaccinated can participat­e in indoor and outdoor activities, large or small, without wearing a mask or physical distancing," Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky said during a White House briefing. "If you are fully vaccinated, you can start doing the things you have stopped doing because of the pandemic."

Calling it an "exciting and powerful moment," Walensky said the decision was made based on numerous reports and literature that have demonstrat­ed the safety and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines.

"We have all longed for this moment when can get back to some sense of normalcy," she said.

Masks are still required for everyone traveling on public transporta­tion, including buses, trains, airports and stations.

The announceme­nt comes amid mounting public pressure nationwide and in California, where nearly 50% of the population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and coronaviru­s case rates have dropped dramatical­ly. Earlier this month, the state recorded its lowest hospitaliz­ation rate since the first few weeks of the pandemic.

The Biden administra­tion and the CDC in recent weeks also faced pressure to ease guidelines to make the benefits of vaccinatio­n abundantly clear, emphasizin­g the extent to which those who are inoculated can return to an almostnorm­al life.

The science also remains clear around unvaccinat­ed people, who "remain at risk of mild or severe illness, of death or of spreading the disease to others," Walen

sky said. Unvaccinat­ed people should still wear masks and get vaccinated right away.

Those who develop symptoms should also put their masks back on and get tested right away, officials said.

Walensky said the agency also will be updating all of its guidance — including for travel — but that decisions about businesses, schools and other settings where it may be hard to determine who is or is not vaccinated will likely be determined at a local level.

"The country is very heterogene­ous; it is not uniform," she said. "I would encourage counties and localities to look at how much vaccine they have, how many people have been vaccinated, look at how many cases are in their area, and to make those decision with that informatio­n in mind."

The debate around face masks came just days after the CDC updated its COVID-19 science brief to emphasize the virus' airborne transmissi­bility. Transmissi­on occurs in three main ways, the agency affirmed. They are the inhalation of aerosol particles; deposition of virus droplets onto mucous membranes such as the mouth, nose and eyes; and touching mucous membranes with "soiled hands contaminat­ed with the virus."

In April, the CDC loosened its guidelines around outdoor face masks, but not everyone was quick to make the change.

"It's been ingrained in us over the last year," Northridge, California, resident Aaron Lemos, 54, said earlier this week. "Would I like to not wear a mask? Yes. But for the sake of my family and community, I feel I should still wear it."

On Thursday, Walensky noted that people with compromise­d immune systems should speak to their doctors before giving up their masks.

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